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Bricker, Diane; Clifford, Jantina; Yovanoff, Paul; Pretti-Frontczak, Kristie; Waddell, Misti; Allen, David; Hoselton, Rob – Journal of Early Intervention, 2008
This study examined the accuracy of a curriculum-based assessment for use during the eligibility process for Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEA) services. The study extended a previous investigation in which performance scores of children without disabilities on the Assessment, Evaluation, and Programming System (AEPS)…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Intervals, Curriculum Based Assessment, Eligibility
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Parker, Caroline E.; Louie, Josephine; O'Dwyer, Laura – Regional Educational Laboratory Northeast & Islands, 2009
Using assessment results for 5th and 8th grade English language learner students in New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont, the report finds that the English language domains of reading and writing (as measured by a proficiency assessment) are significant predictors of performance on reading, writing, and mathematics assessments and that the…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Language Proficiency, Grade 5
Clune, William H.; White, Paula A. – Wisconsin Center for Education Research (NJ1), 2008
Many urban districts have adopted interim assessments in recent years as a supplement to annual testing. Possible purposes for such tests include monitoring and assisting student progress, aligning the curriculum, and practicing for state exams, but little is known about how effectively real systems advance these purposes. The Providence Public…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Public Schools, Policy Analysis, Cost Effectiveness
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Wirt, Edgar – Journal of Experimental Education, 1987
In negotiating to obtain a sample of records from a computer file, it is important to be able to present a simple program that will produce a representative and valid sample. This article describes two procedures: (1) an interval selection method; and (2) a random numbers file. (JAZ)
Descriptors: Algorithms, Business, Computers, Databases
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Wood, John B. – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1987
Birthday-deathday relationship has been called an artifact due to continuous depletion of population with age. The increased death rate with age, however, cancels this effect at ages 75 to 84. There remains a 33 percentexcess of deaths from heart disease among married persons aged 75 and older in the three-day period centered at the birthday.…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Death, Intervals, Older Adults
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Shaw, Dale G; And Others – Journal of Educational Measurement, 1987
Information loss occurs when continuous data are grouped in discrete intervals. After calculating the squared correlation coefficients between continuous data and corresponding grouped data for four population distributions, the effects of population distribution, number of intervals, and interval width on information loss and recovery were…
Descriptors: Intervals, Rating Scales, Sampling, Scaling
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Rankin, Robert P.; Maneker, Jerry S. – Journal of Divorce, 1987
Analyzed data from 2 percent sample of couples who filed for divorce/dissolution in California in six years from 1966 through 1971, to examine the relationship between wife's employment status and marital duration to separation. Results showed housewives were likely to be married longer before separation than were employed wives, except when they…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Divorce, Employed Women, Females
Stallings, William M.; Singhal, Sushila – J Exp Educ, 1969
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Intervals, Probability, Statistical Significance
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Shull, Richard L.; Grimes, Julie A.; Bennett, J. Adam – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2004
By nose poking a lighted key, rats obtained food pellets on either a variable- interval schedule of reinforcement or a schedule that required an average of four additional responses after the end of the variable-interval component (a tandem variable-interval variable-ratio 4 schedule). With both schedule types, the mean variable interval was…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Intervals, Time Management, Animals
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Lister, Jennifer; Tarver, Kenton – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2004
The difficulty that older listeners experience understanding conversational speech may be related to their limited ability to use information present in the silent intervals (i.e., temporal gaps) between dynamic speech sounds. When temporal gaps are present between nonspeech stimuli that are spectrally invariant (e.g., noise bands or sinusoids),…
Descriptors: Artificial Speech, Stimuli, Musicians, Intervals
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Reed, Phil – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2006
The conditions under which stimulus over-selectivity occurred were studied using a matching-to-sample procedure with non-autistic adults. A matching-to-sample discrimination learning task with a number of sample-comparison retention intervals was used. The results demonstrated that an increase in retention interval increased the degree of stimulus…
Descriptors: Intervals, Discrimination Learning, Adults, Task Analysis
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Papini, Mauricio R.; Pellegrini, Santiago – Learning and Motivation, 2006
Surprising downshifts from more preferred (training incentive) to less preferred incentives (test incentive) are usually accompanied by emotional activation and suppression of conditioned behavior in rats. Two experiments were designed to determine whether consummatory behavior is similarly affected by downshifts of equal proportions. Within…
Descriptors: Scaling, Incentives, Behavior, Conditioning
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Walker, David A. – NASPA Journal, 2004
Using correct statistical concepts is an important component when conducting quantitative research. Ideas such as power, effect size, and confidence intervals need to be addressed appropriately every time a research study is initiated. The intent of this review of the literature is to reacquaint faculty, practitioners, and graduate students with…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Intervals, Graduate Students, Sample Size
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Collier, Geoffrey L.; Ogden, R. Todd – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
The Wing-Kristofferson model (A. M. Wing & A. B. Kristofferson, (1973a, 1973b) decomposes the variance of isochronous finger tapping into 2 components: a central clock component and a peripheral motor component. The method assumes that there is no drift in the intertap intervals. A new method is introduced that further decomposes the clock…
Descriptors: Intervals, Psychological Studies, Evaluation Methods, Time
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Winman, Anders; Hansson, Patrik; Juslin, Peter – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
Format dependence implies that assessment of the same subjective probability distribution produces different conclusions about over- or underconfidence depending on the assessment format. In 2 experiments, the authors demonstrate that the overconfidence bias that occurs when participants produce intervals for an uncertain quantity is almost…
Descriptors: Probability, Intervals, Sampling, Psychological Studies
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